I’m not a good dancer. I’ve come to this conclusion not through study but through ridicule and injury. Apparently it demands the ability to exhibit control over your limbs in some rhythmic capacity where “rhythmic” is defined both as “not chaotic” and “not stationary”. To make matters worse, this extends to all your limbs, not just one or two; you aren’t allowed to just wave one arm about because that’s all you can concentrate on. Like most men, I function with a two-item queue; I’m not a multitasker. This, I believe, is the reason why women are better dancers than men are.

The seventies is when male dancing went mainstream in the form of “disco”. If you look closely, you will notice that disco moves involve moving no more than two appendages at once; most moves can be done with half that. Convincing women that this is “dancing” is the Male Gender’s most significant accomplishment since Einstein discovered the Theory of Relativity. Male dancing has not evolved since, if the local pub is anything to go from.

Prior to the invention of the compact crank, climbing was good practice for disco dancing: if the gradient was anywhere near respectable, you could ponder long and hard about the one leg that was doing all that pushing right at that moment. Even the climbers like Charly Gaul who were accredited as “spinners” came nowhere close to modern climbers’ cadential sensibilities where cols are gobbled up at 110+ rpm.

For the book signing event we held for The Rules in NYC, @Gianni loaned me his trusted steed, Bella, whom he keeps back on the East Coast. This lovely lady is clad in old school Campa and the gritty 42×23 low gear to go with it. He giggled as he watched me rise out of the saddle to do Le Disco over the stout ramps along the hills of New Jersey.

At the risk of sounding like an old grumpopatamus (the slightly less charming relation to the hippopotamus), climbing for us big blokes used to be about breathing and pushing on the pedals (that’s our two-item queues at capacity) until the eyes went dark, at which point you kept breathing and pushing until you got to the top and went down the other side like you trusted your tires more than you appreciated physics. Now its all about “cadence” and “heart rate” and “wattage” and “not being fat” and probably a few other things that I disagree with that I haven’t even thought of.

Not that I have anything against spinning; I used to be a “spinner”. Back in the 80’s and 90’s, I was always the spinner in the group, riding along at 80 or 90 rpm. These days, I’m the “masher” in the group, riding along at 80 or 90 rpm. This is one more reason why I love Flanders; I’ve never seen a Flandrian spin, unless it was the 53×11. On the one occasion I caught Johan Museeuw riding a compact (testing it, he was), his only remark was that the 50T wasn’t big enough for climbing.

The Flemish riders are all about doing De Vlaamse Disco as they mash a monster gear up some unimaginable cobbled grade. I am given to understand Boonen trains by riding the Koppenberg in the 53. That’s my kind of climbing; more stubborn than brains, more burnt cartilage than knees.

That’s what Merckx invented Advil for.

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • @frank-

    Wasn't it the Prophet after all who answered whether it is better to spin Smaller gears or ride Big gears with the quote- "if you want to go fast..spin Big gears.

  • @Haldy

    @frank-

    Wasn't it the Prophet after all who answered whether it is better to spin Smaller gears or ride Big gears with the quote- "if you want to go fast..spin Big gears.

    I genuinely hope so!!

  • More is always better, so more teeth must be better for climbing. I did try one of those compacts for a bit... terrible thing they are with the big jump between the small and big ring. Still, I did spend more time in the big ring (all of it) so that much as cool.

  • climbing for us big blokes used to be about breathing and pushing on the pedals

    @Frank And it still very much is for me! Great article Frank. Made me feel a lot better about my fight against gravity and climbs.

  • The VMH refers to my dancing as "interpretive" and I'm okay with that. Heck, I coulda been a good dancer, but I was too busy playing sports all the time.

    Spinning is so fucking boring. Why do I want to sit around and do that when I can stand and dance?

    What do we have going on in the photo - is the Hardman on the right in clips 'n' straps and the Hardman on the left clipless? Talk about an interesting peloton when you had those two forces coexisting.

  • This is why I like climbing hills on a fixed-gear.  No thinking, no mucking around and grasping at the shift lever when things get tough - just stand up and make it happen.  My best hill climb times have all happened on the fixie.

    Not that I can climb for shit - my sprinter's muscle has seen too many workouts lately.

  • Both my dancing and climbing style tend to match this Mancunian mad mans monkey gait...

  • @Frank

    .......modern climbers' cadential sensibilities where cols are gobbled up at 110+ rpm

    This only works when one can make 400+ watts in 20 - 30 minute blocks.

    for lowly mortals like myself, this would mean breathing through my eyeballs and my tongue bouncing off my stem.  Any disco move would look like a dying monkey falling out of a tall tree

  • Great article, @Frank - petje af.

    I've mentioned it before, I think - but the blue steel 'Moser' (late eighties vintage) given to me by my dad, has a 52-42 chainring and a 14-18 straight block. My aging knees seem to prefer the 50-34 compact on my (much newer; 2012) Giant for riding over the short, steep hills of Eastern Jutland - but there's definitely something old school cool about mashing up a steep incline on the 18.

    Very minor point (*pedant alert*) - but the French word for describing people or stuff from the region of Flanders is "Flamand". The Dutch/Flemish term (you'll like this) is 'Vlaams/Vlaamse', with a capital 'V'

     

    @antihero I've been giving some serious thought to converting one of my old steel steeds to fixed. What gear are you using on yours?

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